When editing images, users can now specify a ‘focal point’ region that cropped versions of the image will be centred on. Previously the focal point could only be set automatically, through image feature detection.

The main navigation menu has been reorganised, placing site configuration options in a ‘Settings’ submenu. This includes two new items, which were previously only available through the Django admin backend: ‘Groups’, for setting up user groups with a specific set of permissions, and ‘Sites’, for managing the list of sites served by this Wagtail instance.

Wagtail’s search interface applies a ‘boost’ value to give extra weighting to matches on the title field. The original boost value of 100 was found to be excessive, and in Wagtail 0.7 this has been reduced to 2. If you have used comparable boost values on other fields, to give them similar weighting to title, you may now wish to reduce these accordingly. See Indexing.

The page locking mechanism adds a locked field to wagtailcore.Page, defaulting to False. Any application code working with Page objects should be unaffected, but any code that creates page records using direct SQL, or within existing South migrations using South’s frozen ORM, will fail as this code will be unaware of the new database column. To fix a South migration that fails in this way, add the following line to the 'wagtailcore.page' entry at the bottom of the migration file:

The focal_point_key field on wagtailimages.Rendition has been changed to null=False, to fix an issue with duplicate renditions being created. If you have defined a custom Rendition model in your project (by extending the wagtailimages.AbstractRendition class), you will need to apply a migration to make the corresponding change on your custom model. Unfortunately neither South nor Django 1.7’s migration system are able to generate this automatically - you will need to customise the migration produced by ./manage.pyschemamigration / ./manage.pymakemigrations, using the wagtailimages migration as a guide: